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Gold, silver price forecasts slashed as US rate rise looms

Wed, Apr 15, 2015 - 8:39 PM

Analysts have made big cuts to expectations for gold and silver prices this year and next after the metals, weighed down by the prospect of higher US interest rates, failed to recover last year's losses in early 2015.

PHOTO: REUTERS

[LONDON] Analysts have made big cuts to expectations for gold and silver prices this year and next after the metals, weighed down by the prospect of higher US interest rates, failed to recover last year's losses in early 2015.

A poll of 38 analysts and traders conducted by Reuters over the last month returned a median forecast of US$1,209 an ounce for gold this year, down from US$1,234 an ounce in a similar poll conducted in January.

In 2016, gold is now expected to average US$1,250 an ounce, down from an earlier forecast of US$1,278 an ounce.

The metal ended the first quarter little changed, failing to recover last year's 2 per cent losses, as expectations that the United States was on track for its first rate increase in nearly a decade tempered investors' appetite for gold.

"The relevant question for gold is not only the hike of the Fed Funds rate, but how US Treasury notes and bonds, as well as the US dollar, will react," Peter Fertig, director of Quantitative Commodity Research, said.

"From my point of view, yields in the United States are too low, and Treasury yields should rise to 2.25-2.50 per cent. This should also lead to a firmer US dollar against the euro. Both reactions should drag gold considerably lower."

Weak prices have in the past led to strong demand growth from the key physical gold markets in Asia, particularly China and India. Demand for jewellery, coins and bars hit record levels in 2013 after gold prices plunged.

However, current prices do not seem to be stimulating the same response, analysts said.

"The festive and wedding demand from India in January, Dubai's Shopping Festival in January and the Chinese Lunar New Year celebration in February turned out to be highly disappointing," Societe Generale analyst Robin Bhar said.

Analysts also cut back their forecasts for silver. The median forecast returned in the March poll was US$16.70 an ounce for this year, down from US$17.20 in January. For 2016, the median forecast was US$17.80, down from US$18.20.

Silver outperformed gold early in the year, with the gold/silver ratio, which measures the number of silver ounces needed to buy an ounce of gold, retreating from December's 5-1/2-year high to its lowest since October last month.

"The market remains oversupplied as high and volatile prices in recent years have curbed industrial demand. Hence, silver remains dependent on investment demand, as gold does, implying that prices should come down again with gold."